“I will never stop though until Central Bedfordshire Council delete the footpath, accept it should never have been there, apologise for what they have put me and my wife Berry through and award us compensation.”

Mr Bowers, 78, insists that the former Bedfordshire County Council relied on inaccurate information when it designated the path running alongside his four-bedroom detached home in Clophill Road, as a public right of way in 1991.

And he claims to have discovered evidence proving that a number of people who signed a neighbour’s petition swearing they had “unchallenged use” of the path for 20 years until 1956 had not even been alive at that time.

Central Bedfordshire councillors at one time agreed to back his fight in the courts but then withdrew their support after officers warned it could cost thousands of pounds if they lost.

Mid-Beds MP Nadine Dorries, local Tory councilor Paul Duckett and Maulden Parish Council have been vociferous supporters of Mr Bowers’ campaign over the years.

Ms Dorries said: “Quite simply, Footpath 28 should not be there. Alan Bowers has been very badly served over the last 20 years.”

She accused the former county council of being “badly managed, officious and unaccountable” and said they behaved in an “abhorrent” manner and going “totally against common sense”.

Mr Bowers, who has argued his case through the magistrates and high courts, is now trying to get a judicial review into the whole affair.

He claims officials were “incompetent” and then “lied” and mounted a “cover-up” because nobody wanted to admit they made a mistake when first ruling the path ran across his land.